Hugo Landsberger was born in
Berlin, the son of Rabbi , where he attended the
Joachimsthalsches Gymnasium. After passing his school-leaving exams, he began a banking apprenticeship, which he abandoned; instead, he studied literature and history at the
Universities of Leipzig and
Berlin. He was in contact with the workers' movement, and was expelled from the University of Berlin for giving lectures to workers' associations. Landsberger shifted to writing literary works, which he published under the
pseudonym "Hans Land" and some of which appeared as preprints in
social democratic and
syndicalist newspapers. He cultivated connections with the
naturalist literary movement (including the ) and supported the goals of the
Volksbühne. Landsberger had a close friendship with the actor
Josef Kainz. From 1898 to 1901, he edited the weekly journal
Das neue Jahrhundert. From 1905 he was a member of the editorial board of '
, and from 1909 to 1911 he was a member of the board of the '. After
Hitler's
rise to power, Landsberger, as a Jewish writer interested in social issues, came under fire from the
Nazi regime. According to some accounts, he disappeared in around 1935; others say he died in Berlin in 1939 of an
enlarged prostate gland. ==Work==